Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm chaperoning a school trip with EF Tours and just wondered if others could share experiences/tips? The google reviews are pretty bleak though the teachers associated with the trip use them regularly and have very positive things to say.
The teachers are positive about them because they get a free trip if so many people sign up.
Do the teachers get a free solo trip at another time without the students? Because I think that I'd rather not travel than bring 30 middle schoolers to Europe for the chance to go along free with them.
Anonymous wrote:DS went on a EF tour to Japan with 70 8th grade classmates. Considering flights to Japan can be $2000, I thought the total price was reasonable. The teachers and chaperones absolutely deserve to go for free because I certainly wouldn’t want to pay to go to chaperone dozens of 13-14 year olds!
He had a great time. Yes, the big group dinners were not great food, especially the kids who had food restrictions who sometimes were given vegetables and rice. But he had so much fun and did so many activities/saw so many sights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:EF Tours sounds like a total rip off. They jack up the price for students and parents so the teachers can attend free.
I think it is a rip off and yet I'm SO glad my parents let me do it when I was in high school. It felt so good to just go by myself without my parents.
Anonymous wrote:I've chaperoned multiple trips with both EF and Explorica.
What are your concerns/questions? Where are you traveling? What age students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:EF Tours sounds like a total rip off. They jack up the price for students and parents so the teachers can attend free.
This and usually there is a "scholarship" so students who might not be able to afford to go otherwise might do so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm chaperoning a school trip with EF Tours and just wondered if others could share experiences/tips? The google reviews are pretty bleak though the teachers associated with the trip use them regularly and have very positive things to say.
The teachers are positive about them because they get a free trip if so many people sign up.
Anonymous wrote:Do NOT use EF Educational Tours! We were scammed out of almost $500 when our son's tour was cancelled and we asked for a refund.
Our son was signed up for an EF Educational Tours trip to Germany and Switzerland. We had been paying monthly installments for a year and a half when we were informed by the school 4 months before the trip was to take place that the tour was cancelled.
Upon calling EF Educational Tours to receive a refund for the cancelled tour, we were informed that we would have to pay a $585 cancellation fee ($95 cancellation fee - which we were aware of- and a $490 insurance fee, of which we were not aware), even though it was the school that cancelled the trip, not us.
EF Educational Tours's position is that because THEY were not the ones that cancelled the trip, the trip was therefore not considered cancelled at all, since we could have rebooked our son on one of the school's other tours, none of which were of interest to us.
In researching EF Educational Tours online, we find countless terrible reviews exposing the company as a scam. Many other families have akso been forced to pay the same $585 fee for trips that they themselves did not cancel - it seems to be part of their business model. The company has a 1.16/5 star rating from the Better Business Bureau and the Attorney General of Colorado has investigated them under the Consumer Protection Act. (https://www.bbb.org/us/ma/cambridge/profile/travel-agency/ef-educational-tours-0021-15313)
We wish we had done this research before signing our son up. We would highly recommend no one sign their child up for any EF Educational Tours programs.